Wednesday 27 March 2013

ABSA Cape Epic, March 17th - 24th 2013


My Epic Epic


Ever since the Pioneer last year both Yolande Speedy and myself had dreams of doing the Epic together.  It wasn’t going to happen though with neither of us able to secure an entry into what is not only the most popular and famous mountain bike stage race in the world but also the most expensive. I returned to South Africa with other races to do and a flight booked home after the Argus on the 13th March.  However, cycling is a close-knit sport and a few weeks after my arrival we had a sponsor in the form of Hendrik from Energas.  He is a die-hard Epic fan… one of a very small handful competing in his 10th this year and bringing his family in tow.  He had three entries and after a coffee and quick chat Speedy and me and had one of those.  It was a case of ‘did that meeting just happen’ afterwards and soon I had my flight re booked and could join in the hype surrounding the 10th Anniversary of the Untamed Race.

I didn’t alter my training much just because I was in the Epic.  With a full race program with Bizhub I got fit racing and improved my technical skills as I went along.  I was lucky to be able to base myself in Stellenbosch the weeks leading to the Epic with the Grape Escape and the Argus all down there and spent hour after hour on the single track in Jonkershoek as I knew what a good XC racer Yolande is. 

Two days before the prologue I left my peaceful base at the Ridein cafĂ© near the reserve for the hustle of Cape Town and registration day.  Far from relaxing the day before the event we spent hours queuing for bags, unloading bike boxes, packing, re packing, meeting people and generally getting nervous!  Our team of 6 all stayed in Cape Town so it was a good chance to get together before the race began.  

22km Prologue, Meerendal Wine Estate

Up at 5 we left Cape Town for Durbanville.  Waving Hendrik and Laurike, his partner and daughter off we crashed out for a few hours till our 10.30 start time.  The atmosphere was electric at the start and rolling down the start chute between the crowds was unforgettable.  Unlike any other race in the World these crowds aren’t just there to watch the pros, they are there to watch every single rider go off and that’s the appeal.  It’s a big deal whether your Christophe Sauser or Joe Bloggs the weekend warier!  
Yolande led us up the single-track climb and down the technical descent.  By the top we were caught by the top 2 teams but hung on to them for quite a while.  By half way we re passed Topeak and the four of us rode through the traffic together.  The route was fantastic, plenty of single track but near the end there was so many riders on route it was impossible to race hard. Most guys moved out of the way quickly, unlike the tortoise that decided to amble on route and was lucky not to become part of my X King’s tread!! 
We finished very happy in 3rd place, the first time on the podium for me in the Epic with Topeak Ergon in 2nd and BMC Wheelers 1st
Stage time: 1:11

Stage One: 96km Citrusdal – Citrusdal

The day started with a long climb and at the top Sally’s partner, Milena Landtwing was by the side of the road having abandoned with a bug.  Yolande crashed on the tar of all places but did no damage and soon we moved up into 2nd place.  The course was very Epic like, lots of deep, unridable sand interspersed with steep big rocky descents followed by a long portage section up out of an open hot valley.  However, we were having a great ride, moving through bunches and riding at a perfectly matched pace.  Down one tricky rocky descent I fell landing heavily on my arm and hip.  Yolande picked me up and, avoiding looking too closely at my bloody arm, I was more worried about my back, which was really sore to ride on.  It knocked the stuffing out of me and I relied on Yolande to get me home, collecting coke for me and sitting in the wind.  Towards the end I was obviously riding skew and my hamstring started to cramp.  4km to go it went into full cramp making me leap off the bike and wince a lot!!  Yolande was a star and got me to the end in 2nd place and straight to the Mediclinic. While I tried to lie, along with many other weary souls coming in, the cramp kept setting in, probably from all the walking though to me it felt like my body was rebelling from the pain I had inflicted!!  My hip was just badly bruised which was a big relief while my arm needed stitches.  I nearly had to go to a hospital miles away as it was down to the bone and initially too open and deep to stitch until the top doc came along with a long needle and stitched it perfectly. My claim to fame while there was having stitches next to Tom Ritchey also having a few in his shin!
Stage Time: 5:58


Stage Two: 146km Citrusdal – Saronsberg

Rolling out from the start we saw Esther Suss pull over and with Topeak also out now we were race leaders.  We were unsure whether it was a bad day or a mechanical so we rode on as hard as we could to try to stay in the lead.  After one long, pain free climb we descended over some corrugated roads which was agony on my arm.  I discovered swearing aloud helped though had to apologize a few times when I realised I was close to some other riders!!
After a steady start again we started moving through bunches.  Apart from the pain in my arm the legs felt great and we seemed to be flying along.  Near the end when I started to dip, Yolande got stronger and led us into the finish and our first stage win!  We were delighted even before we heard that Ester was having a really bad day and that we were on course to move into the lead.  Pulling the Rusk leaders jersey was so surreal, we’d come to the Epic with hopes of a podium and now we were in the jersey.  It was a crazy afternoon of interviews after already such a long stage and we hardly rested until bedtime when I finally collapsed in my tent. 
Stage Time: 6:51

Stage three: 94km, Saronsberg, Tulbagh
We learn’t today that Esther had pulled out.  She also had the stomach bug which seemed to be mainly affecting the girls, with teammate, Leana also battling through.  It was disappointing as I expected it was going to be a fierce battle with BMC as they recovered and clawed their way back to us making the race more competitive and interesting.   However there was still a long way to go and lots could still happen. We started the ‘tour of the basin’ (a flattish day under the mountains) fast, lining on the front row with the other jersey wearers it was hard not to but soon we settled down.  With tiredness setting in it became a bit of a joke reading out our super low heart rate while we were feeling near max.  My Brytongps recorded 155 as my max today, way off the 172 a few days ago! The day was hard, mainly because we’d been told it was a recovery day so I let my guard down a little and forget this is the Epic, there is no such thing!!  We sat in bunches instead of dragging them along and while my arm was still sore we had no other issues and finished comfortably in the lead again with C –Bear in 2nd
Stage Time 4:58


Stage Four: 120km Saronsberg – Wellington

The dauntingly long day was probably our best yet.  With a fast start the k’s flew by and the climbs were all pretty rideable.  My arm felt loads better which helped on the technical bits too and the views out of the desolate bowl of Zuurvlakte were spectacular.  We did have a small collision which dug a hole in the other arm but nothing much.  Out of there we hit the 16km tar climb up Bain’s Kloof Pass.  After all the rough riding so far this was luxury and we rode along in a big group.  The great thing is we are both evenly paced on the climbs now and as the gradient ramped up it didn’t take any words for us both to figure out we were hurting more than we needed to to stay in tact and both happily backed off.  At the top we hit some fantastic single tracks at Bain MTB trails and having done them in the Grape Escape I was confident and enjoyed them, especially following Yolande’s lines!  The afternoon was filled as usual: Quick wash down, brush hair to feel half human, can of Fanta which I have suddenly become a huge fan of, podium, jersey, interview.  Drug test while having recovery drink, shower and give washing in.  Trip to Mediclinic to firstly clean my wound and today to get a few extra stitches in the other arm (I promised them stabilizers are coming on tomorrow!!) 10 minute ice bath in the Riders Lounge, usually with lunch, lots of socializing, Go Pro Village Hero prize giving (first in each cat in the tents), tents sorted, kit ready once its cool enough to get in the tent, bottles washed, filled (one 32gi, one water) and given into Race Nutrition for us at the 2nd water point, prize giving, dinner, find one of many people who have helped us to give bottle prize giving wine too, and finally bed.  Thankfully our bikes are been really well looked after by Sean and bodies by Bridget from DimensionSports!!
Stage Time: 5:49

Stage Five: 75km Wellington
Today was our ‘fun’ day in the Epic, a short stage with over 20 km of single track round Bain MTB trails at Welvanpas.  On any normal day it would have been a great day but today we both took a strain.  The struggle began in breakfast, eating at 5am is always a mission and is becoming harder then we both felt quite nauseous the whole ride.  Though 32Gi has been providing me with steady long lasting energy, today we could only face water and didn’t eat a lot too.  We weren’t ill in any way, may have just caught the edge of either the bug or our bodies telling us they needed a break from glucose intake!!  However, we were rewarded for the hard quad burning climbs with lots of fantastic single track and I found a friendly Canadian to chat to along the way.  He mentioned he was once a sprinter to which I replied, ‘yeh, I used to enjoy sprinting too’.  Later on, I yelled (all be it politely) to his teammate who I thought was cutting it a bit fine passing at the bottom of a sandy turn.  Can you imagine how I felt when I found out the sprinter was TDF yellow jersey wearer Alex Stieda and his mate was the legend Tom Ritchey! That’s the appeal of this race; everyone is out there experiencing this thing together, famous, fast or just a weekend warier.
We finished 1st again all be it behind Alex and Tom!
Stage Time: 4:06

Stage Six: 99km Wellington – Stellenbosch
The stage started well.  We were in our usual position and taking it careful on the descents.  We both had better legs and an appetite back so were in good spirits in the forest round Du Toiskloof.  The day had started a bit wet so the dust had settled and the temperature was perfect in the 20s.  I was leading our group along a straight slightly downhill section when I heard a crash and looked back to see Yolande on the floor. She stood up holding her arm instantly suggesting broken collarbone.  However, though in a lot of pain, she was able to move it so I told her I didn’t think it was broke and we rode on backing right off as any bump was agony for her.  We dropped down to 3rd ladies but that didn’t matter at all as I could see she was really battling and near the end with lots of single track on and off the bike must have killed. Once over the line in our new camp she went to the hospital for X-rays with Paul.  We were all shocked to hear her clavicle was broke along with 2 ribs in the back!  If she was in agony, I was an emotional wreck for the afternoon, we have grown close and I couldn’t believe our adventure could take such a turn for the worse.  She was determined she would ride the last day but I wasn’t sure she’s be able to even put her hands on the bars and think I slept less than her. 
Stage Time: 6:14

Stage Seven: 54km Stellenbosch – Lourensford
I was glad for my Rudy Project glasses today as I was pretty teary eyed as we were called to the start line.  Yolande was determined to ride and I had a phone and jacket in my pocket in case of the worse case scenario the doctor had told us which was a punctured lung from the broken ribs.  If it sounds scary it was and I was emotionally drained by the time we rolled away.  Dropping back through the group we walked the first steep climb, not due to the gradient but because there were too many people zig zagging around and we weren’t risking any falls today.  Finally we were in peace, in between B and C batch with the whole route to ourselves.  We kept conversation light and I let Yolande lead every downhill so she could see the bumps.  I was traffic marshal and buffer, shouting to her which side groups were coming past on and making sure they passed us carefully, and if not, they were going to ram me before her!  We had some portage sections, which were really painful for her lifting her arm up, but we got through and with 5 km to go knew we were going to make it. It was pretty emotional riding onto the field together.  Along the way we’d had so much support and at the finish it felt like everyone knew our battle.  The champagne was sprayed and we gave each other a huge hug, I don’t think I’d ever experience a week with anyone like that again and I definitely not forget it!!  Flying back to Joberg that afternoon and leaving the bubble behind was fine with me as the memories will last a long time I then flew home to the UK for a real break. Fingers crossed for a quick recovery for my teammate, I’m sure we’ll get the chance to race together again some time, all be it with body amour and three wheels at the back instead of one!


Thanks to so many people: Energas for getting us on the start line and for the continuous help throughout, Bizhub for the last three years of support and getting me to South Africa in the first place, Sean and Bridget from Dimensionsports for looking after bikes and bodies all week, calming us down at the prologue and making us look so clean for the podium (!), the Mediclinic for patching us both up and sending us on our way with no doubting that we wouldn’t make it, Rocky Mountain for my amazing 29er, though I’m covered in bruises and holes that bike didn’t have one problem all week, Continental and Squirt Lube for problem free tires and chain, 32Gi for energy drink, chews and accelerate tabs, ASG for a bullet proof Rudy Project helmet, glasses and great fitting kit, BrytonGPS for really accurate distances and the humor of seeing our ever decreasing max heart rate, best ever gloves from Gripp and blister free Sidi shoes.  Thanks also to all the support and messages we got along that way, there were no way we weren’t going to finish that race and let everyone down!! 




Tuesday 12 March 2013

Cape Argus Pick and Pay Cycle Tour


Pre Argus ride looking down Chapmen's Peak

10th March 2013

Lining up on the start line for the 4th time it was hard not to feel nervous with such a great atmosphere, music playing and people dancing despite the fact the sun was just coming up.  With such little road racing in my legs, the possibility that I still hadn’t fully recovered from last weeks efforts, as well as the fact we were off with the fast 30 plus men I was preparing for a hard 3 hours.  I was right.  The first climb out of town I was struggling, I looked down to see my heart rate was still low but me legs were screaming. Luckily we turned into the wind and sat mid way back in the group the pace eased off.

The race first split as we turned in land.  I started at the front and crested the top off the back!  Luckily not too far back though and I hung onto the wheels in front to get back to the main group.  With the wind behind now I had no gears at all left and had to concentrate fully on staying within millimeters of the strong men pulling us back.  That effort woke my legs up a bit and up Chapmen’s Peak, after a very near collision with a tandem, I rode a little better and while not in the front group was pretty confident of descending back into the group.  It’s true that if you climb bad you learn to descend well, the desperation to get back to the group always makes you take more risks and by the bottom we were back to the leaders again. 

The last climb I had to ride my own pace.  At the bottom for me it would be a flat out sprint just to stay in the group such was my shocking leg speed so I rode it mountain bike style and by the top had pulled back a small group of biggish men who again descended back to the main bunch which was now a lot smaller. 

The good thing about racing with the fast 30 plus men was that the finish was the least chaotic I have known.  It was easy to position yourself through Camps Bay and towards the end I knew out of the 6 of us girls left I would finish 6th in a bunch sprint if we all lined out on the road.  With that in mind I moved right to the front, 3rd or 4th wheel back risking an early sprint but also avoiding getting blocked in or having to come round anyone.  Two men had a small break in front about 10 meters or so and I watched as one just flew straight up in the air.  My guess is he clipped the wheel of the guy in front.  I managed to dodge it but heard a huge bang behind as someone went straight into him.  The pace eased up then and as we turned into the finish straight the men started sprinting past me.  In top gear I couldn’t get on a wheel and when Annriette and Cherise came past I think I’d been sprinting for 500m already.  Near the line with a strong tail wind I had no gears left and had to sit down as Jennie edged past me.  I came in 4th and while I was disappointed to miss the podium for the first time in 4 years I was happy with the girls who got up there. 

It was very sad to hear the crash involved Sharon Laws who was taken straight to hospital with a compression fracture on her spine and broken ribs and collarbone.  It was a freak accident, which could have happened to anyone but with the Epic coming its extra painful for her after all the preparation for it. 
Me and Phil Liggett


  

Sunday 3 March 2013

Argus Mountain Bike Challenge 3rd March 2013



Arriving at the start this morning it felt like our party from the Grape Escape had been gate crashed.  Same organizers, same cyclists just a few thousand more riders!  The start inevitably started like a one day race, flat out.  At first I was carried away but very soon my legs rebelled and I had to slow down.  I could accelerate when passed by a rider, hang on for 10 seconds or so then drop off so that is how I rode the first quarter.  Jennie was also with me no doubt feeling exactly the same while our rivals on fresh legs rode away.  The course wasn’t my favorite, after such great trails recently in GR300 and the Grape Escape riding sandy, loose drags and rocky corners wasn’t a lot of fun.  My legs recovered a bit, or everyone else slowed down, as we hit the climb mid way through and with one smooth single track section my spirits lifted especially seeing the kms tick by.  However the last 10km were not fun.  With the temperature now in the high 30s we climbed on a really slow going loose rocky trail while the descent wasn’t much faster with rocks and sand, a lot of which was un ridable after so many hours already in the saddle. If it hadn’t been for the company of a few other riders I think I would have slowed a lot more!  I was glad to finish and very pleased the organizers had cut the distance to 68km due to the heat.  All was put right though after the finish as we were whisked away to a shaded spot for the elite riders and given delicious sandwiches and drinks and made to feel like real VIPs!   Mariska was 1st, Theresa 2nd, myself 3rd and Jennie 4th

Nashua Grape Escape 28th – 2nd March 2013




Having spent over 10 months now in South Africa over the last 3 years there aren’t many races I haven’t done but the Grape Escape is one and with it on the doorstep of my new ‘home’ in Stellenbosch I was looking forward to riding some of the trails I have done and which will also be in the looming Cape Epic. 

Stage One
Riebeeck Kasteel – Wellington, 78km 1725m ascent

Starting all together on open windy district roads the pace was fast from the start.  I used any road skills I could and stayed as far up front as possible and out of the wind.  Soon the bunch spilt and I was hovering off the back of the front group for a while until a group of 8 or so came past.  Feeling good I hung onto them my heart rate well over threshold but it paid off as I was ahead of the other girls and only Ariane caught me once the hills started.  I stuck with her as long as possible but eventually lost contact on a rocky descent and watched as she rode away with another guy back on the district roads.  With no one else in sight I hit a bad spot along the corrugated roads and eventually sat up to wait for another rider also alone.  Working together was better for the moral though soon we turned back into the climbs and some tricky single track to the finish.  Ariane won the day, I came in 2nd with Candice in 3rd.  Teammate Leana took some strain, clearly having not recovered from the bug in Kysna.  Though only in Wellington I decided to stay and camp. With free access to the local pool, friends to chat with, massage, a clothes wash service, drinks all day and a fantastic dinner it was worth the portaloos and sleeping bag! 

Stage Two
Wellington, 60km 1788m ascent

I knew I would have a tough day trying to keep up with the other girls as there was 30km of single track to get round.  I lost Ariane after an fall early on in the sand but stayed with Candice a while, catching her on the climbs and watching her float down the single track with such little effort.  It definitely helped having ridden the Welvanpas Trails with Leana but Candice was still in a different league on the technical stuff and soon I also had to back off.  I was riding flat out again and started making small errors and not able to make the short power climbs. After the long climb near Bainskloof Pass we rode an amazing single track back down, through the orchards and into the finish.  It was a perfect stage, lots of fun trails, plenty of climbs and a distance you could ride hard the whole way.  Ariane won the stage, sprinting past Candice on the line while I took 3rd and Jennie 4th. 

Stage Three
Wellington – Boschendal, 70km 1800m ascent

As soon as we hit the first slight incline then my legs exploded this morning!  I battled to hang onto wheels having to chase back all the time and while giving it all I had left in the tank we hit a long steep tarmac climb.  Unsure whether I’d get up a few riders asked if I was ok, never a good sign!!  I backed off and near the top literally sprinted to tag onto the back of the group containing the other girls. We stayed in one group until a long rocky decent down and as I hit a washed out ditch at a bad angle and only came out alive due to my 29er wheels I decided there and then to back off.  The last was a mechanical or a fall.  The route was varied again and very demanding with steep smooth single track climbs and loose rocky descents.  I fell once but nothing major and near the end found myself in a good group.  I hung on to the back and even though I dropped off once managed to get back when I didn’t have to stop for a drink as a friend Rob had made last week gave me a bottle.  While I am a fan of the 32Gi there is nothing like a coke for those last 20km especially if its technical as the caffeine just helps you concentrate more.  I passed Ariane fixing a flat after she dented the rim but never caught Candice who finished 1st, beating me by an agonizing 40 seconds overall on GC.  Ariane got disqualified for taking Cherise’s bike and so Jennie ended 3rd.  Though it was close I can’t be too bitter: taking the mechanical of Ariane’s away it’s the closest I’ve finished to both her and Candice each day despite it been the most toughest and technical three day stage race I’ve done.  I raced flat out and spent 10 hours with an average heart rate just 4 or 5 beats below my anaerobic threshold, I got so used to feeling the lactic burning in my legs and I gave myself a sore throat from breathing in so much dust so there’s no way I could have done anything more.  It was a shame not to have Ariane up on the podium because of one bad call after the battles we’d had but I was pleased for Jennie who was riding stronger each day.